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Review: Orange Box

This speaker looks like a guitar amp, but you’ll pay a premium for the style.
Orange Box amp
Photograph: Orange

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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Physical knobs for volume, bass, and treble make it easy to adjust the sound for different listening environments. Iconic aesthetics that any musician or rock fan would find pleasing. Punchy, concise bass and a mellow top end that are pleasing even when turned up to 11. Impressive battery life.
TIRED
Clunky wall-wart AC adapter. Gig bag costs extra. AC adapter does not fit snugly in the pockets on the gig bag. The high-end on glossy pop music gets murky at high volumes. Expensive.

Think about the last time you saw a person lugging around a Bluetooth speaker and thought to yourself, “Dang, that person looks cool. I want to listen to whatever they’re listening to!” If you have no such memory, you’re not to blame, and you’re certainly not alone. Many portable speakers are dorky hunks of plastic that are aesthetically adjacent to pleather trench coats, mall swords and TJ Maxx hoverboards. And then there are the units that actually sound good, which—with a few exceptions—rank in the looks department between perfunctory and obnoxious.

Iconic guitar amp makers like Fender, Vox, and Marshall have noticed this hole in the market and have plugged it with their own offerings. Marketed as stylish sound cubes bursting with punchy midrange and timeless rocker swag, models like the Fender Indio ($379) and the Marshall Kilburn II ($399) promised to sound just as good as they looked. Now your cool uncle who sleeps on a waterbed can blast Metallica and make jokes about turning up his Marshall to 11 while you knock back a Leinenkugels and help him change the oil in his van! But do these diminutive faux amps have the cojones to make the infamous snares on St. Anger fill the garage with crisp and clangy treble? Can their woofers be trusted to ensure that what little low-end was left in the masters of …And Justice For All is even remotely audible?

In the case of the Orange Box, the aptly named entry from the legendary London-based amplifier brand Orange, the answer is a resounding yes. Clocking in at 50 watts and weighing a little over 6 pounds, this workhorse of a speaker packs a massive punch for its size. After spending a month running the Orange Box through its paces in a variety of scenarioses where Bluetooth speakers are essential—kitchen prep, yard work, household repairs, bothering fellow hikers with Top 40 music at a National Park—we’ve sussed out the good, the bad, and the bothersome of this impressive little box.

Dial-a-Tone

Photograph: Orange

Stark minimalism has been all the rage since the mid-aughts, but the stripping-away of essential knobs, jacks, and buttons is a sore spot for the aging demographic that know the Orange brand better than most. Thankfully Orange’s mimicry of their beloved amplifiers yields tactile, user-friendly results in the Orange Box. With the exception of a rather standard pairing workflow, the rest of the controls on the device have a satisfying analog feel to them. Turning the volume knob up controls the actual output of the amp rather than that of the paired device. This works wonders when you’re across the room and want to control the unit remotely with a maximum volume ceiling that’s mitigated by the volume controls on your phones.

Dedicated bass and treble knobs felt like nice extras at first but became essentials after daily use. The former can add or subtract a warm thump from the low end—around the 100-Hz mark, based on our tests—while the latter can be used to either add or remove presence that hovers around 8 KHz: the sweet spot for most spoken word and singing. Having a hard time hearing a podcast in the shower? Crank the treble to 10. Guests straining to hear over your music at a dinner party? Cut the treble to create a lane for casual conversation.

One minor flaw of the Orange Box is the way it handles the crowded high end of radio-friendly pop music at high volumes. If modern producers cease to brick-wall their mixes and cram every last sonic crevasse with ear candy, then the Orange Box may eventually be up to the challenge, but until then the last era of radio hits that really shine on this speaker is the post-grunge explosion of the late ’90s. Then again, what zoomer is spending $300 on a Bluetooth speaker that looks like the amp their grandpa used to play proto-metal on during the Carter administration? Master of Puppets sounds absolutely killer on the Orange Box, and (almost) nothing else matters.

Party Time

Photograph: Orange

The Orange Box is sexy as-is, but the included leather strap doesn’t do much in making it easier to carry around town on its own. For an extra $60 you can buy a gig bag made of sturdy gray denier fabric, which results in a potent totable that looks and feels more like a soft-side cooler full of ‘Kuges than a portable amp. The bag fits snugly around the box, and a piece of cream-colored cloth covers the grill of the speaker without muffling any of the output. The top snaps in place tidily via a pair of magnets, and it peels back quickly to offer easy access to the control knobs. Side pockets keep small essentials like aux cables, beef jerky, and weed safe from the elements, but the power supply does not fit conveniently in any of the compartments.

On that topic, the included wall wart-style adapter is the obvious low point in the total package, aside from the squishy high end when the Orange Box is turned up all the way. Sure, this is a relatively high-wattage device that’s sold around the globe, but the clunky hunk of plastic that powers this otherwise flawless piece of kit is a throwback to the dark ages of guitar tech in the most undesirable way possible. It barely fits in the gig bag that costs an extra $60 to add on!

Boomer Box

After a playlist of generic trap-pop and Walmart country failed to annoy fellow hikers at the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, we gave up on the bit and transitioned to the essential stoner-metal record Dopesmoker by Sleep. The impenetrably sludgy low-midrange of the 1998 classic oozed from the speakers and filled the forest with churning riffage, and all was right in the world. A glance down a ravine revealed a young burnout couple hiking in matching spa slides who threw up devil horns and offered an affirming “hell yeah” that bounced off the rock face and on toward the horizon.

The Orange Box is not the most technologically advanced Bluetooth speaker on the market, nor does it offer the most crystalline sound for the money. But it’s incredibly loud, it’s dumbfoundingly easy to operate, and the kind of music most people who revere the Orange brand listen to on a regular basis sounds absolutely killer on it.

The added gig bag makes it easy to schlep from the garage to the basement and back, but it looks pretty rad without it. This is the anti-Bluetooth-speaker person’s Bluetooth speaker. Carrying it around might not make you cooler, but it won’t make you uncool.

Pete Cottell is a product reviews contributor at WIRED. He focuses on home recording gadgets, synths, geeky MIDI gear, and the occasional clothing item his social media feed thinks he needs. Pete is a graduate of Ohio State University, where he majored in advanced service industry arts (communications). He is ... Read more
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